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âDonâmuch care for people suggestin, Doc,â rumbled Omnipotent Man, âthat I ainât tellin thâtruth.â
Cold Reality
You listen to Festus long enough,â he whispered, maybe more to himself than to me, âyâstart not even knowin whatâs true about yâseff. He cân tear a strip off ya long enough to make a runway. Onây three or four people in thâworld he donânever talk like that about. Oneâs Hawk King, who he thought was doggone infalalalâŠinfabbubullâŠinflabbubbleââ
ââinfallible?â
âRight. Then thereâs Irân Lass. An I sposeâŠyeah, Chip Monk, his ol sidekick, even though they had a powerful fallin out, but he still donânever say sâmuch as a bad burp about him.
âBut me, heâs always ridin me like a fat jockey on a poor manâs pony. Sayin Argon donâexist, that I done wrong by âMerica, that Iâm, ha-ha, that Iâm addicted tâargonium. I mean, donât that jess take jake-all?â
He glanced up at me for affirmation, while his fingernail continued cutting shapes into the frost field on the window, whether randomly or by design, I wasnât sure.
âSoâŠall these accusations are false, Wally?â
âYesâm.â
âLetâs take it that theyâre false, then. On a scale of one to three, with one being âquite a bit,â and three being âone hundred percent,â how much truth would you say Mr. Piltdownâs claims contain?â
His fingernail stopped on a downward diagonal line. âWell, IâŠI meanâŠI guess then Iâd hafta sayâŠone? Wait, wait a second, is there a zero?â
âNo. How relieved do you feel that youâve been able to release yourself even a little bit from the burden of these self-deceptions, Wally? With one being âvery relieved,â and three being âextremely relievedâ?â
âNow, I didnâsay that I was relieved, maâamââ
âSo how much do you wish that you had not let me know how relieved you are, with one beingââ
âNow, Doctor Brain, sir, maâam, what Iâd, Iâd, Iâd really like to talk with you about is how goshdurn unfair it is for Festus tâbe stompin on mâgood name like that. An not just, like, a hour ago but for the last dadblasted fifty years!â
I tapped the device next to me. âWally, do you know what this is?â
He resumed drawing his frost image, his finger cutting and dancing faster than I could see and raising a cloud of snow. Without even looking back at me, he said, âA DynaScan Reflective Spectroscope JuniorÂź.â
âVery good. Do you know why I have it with me?â
He stopped, silent, his finger suddenly stuck in mid-draw.
âIâve set it to scan for a rare substance,â I said quietly. âDo you know which one?â
âListen, maâam, in my work I fly through solar prominences, planetary cores, Cirque du Soleil showsâI could have any number a things stuck to my suit an capeââ
âAccording to the scanner, this substance isnât on your suit, Wally, and youâre not wearing your cape. Itâs on your fingers, teeth, lips, and nostrils.â
He turned to face me, stepping away from the window. Only then could I see heâd drawn three startlingly detailed portraits, each slightly different, but all clearly versions of the same face.
His own.
And then he turned back to the window and expectorated a gob of electrons onto the glass, and the images pfft! into steam.
âI aint no junkie!â
Grateful Iâd taken the precaution of wearing a rubber under-suit and wooden shoes, I adjusted the lightning rods on either side of me. âWally, I never referred to you as aââ
âI aint!â he said, pointing at me, and without any warning his fingers fell off his pointing-hand and hit the floor.
âAh, HâEâdouble oil derricks, not again,â he said, stooping to pick up his scattered digits with his other hand.
â âNot again,â Wally? Are you saying this has happened before?â
He nodded, holding his fingers up against their stumps, spitting electrical fire upon them to weld them back into place.
I got up to pat the chair across from me to encourage him to sit down when heâd finished with his hand. He didnât budge. âWally, tell me about your father. Your real father. About Jobuseen-Ya.â
âYâmean, you donâbelieve Festusâs foolin? You think Iâm tellin the truth?â
âWally, I know youâre telling the truth. At least, part of it. Now letâs see if together, we can get the rest.â
The Original Golden Age, or the Age of Foolâs Gold?
My daddy, mâreal daddy, was the greatest official on thâentire planet Argon,â said Omnipotent Man after a long, long silence in which the Los Ditkos night began to flow through my bay window like a cola beverage into a crystal decanter.
Wally hardly looked at me, staring instead into the twinkling Bird Island skyline and the neon-metallic phallus of the Tachyon Tower rising above it.
âDaddy was a genius,â he said eventually. âKnew our whole planet was in danger.â
âWhat type of danger?â
âOh, all kinds. Aliens, âspecially. And traitors. Plus, Argon was gon explode if we didnâkeep relieving the planetary pressure of all its excessive energy, which Daddy was a pioneer in removing.â
âI see.â
âSo anyway, he realizes one day thet the whole planetâs gon implodeââ
ââexplode?â
ââright, splode, like that very week, an he wants tâwarn the public, but the damn gubment says heâs jess causin panic is all, an they orders him to shut up or else they gon throw him in jail. So they wonât let im say nuthin, he caint do nuthin, except one thing: save me. So he up and puts me in a rocket ship fâEarth.â
âYou were how old? In Earth years, I mean?â
âI reckon round eight.â
âNow, Wally, what about the rest of the family? Your mother, siblingsâyou had two brothers and a sisterâand everyone else in the extended -Ya familyâŠdidnât he try to save any of them?â
âNaw, see, he could only spare the one rocket, so he couldnâsend any a them. Else he mighta got noticed and got in trouble.â
âBut if he were going to die with the planet anyway, then wouldnât jail time be a rather empty threat?â
His forehead furrowed into a farmerâs field.
âSo why,â I probed, âdo you suppose your father saved you alone, out of
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